Category: Movies

  • What is to be done about boring church worship services?

    Here is a musing note I wrote to students after grading some worship assignments. 

    I continue to reflect on how to make worship less boring. Perhaps it is not boring to you! Great! I just think of atheists who say: "I don't want to go to heaven for eternity. I can't stand one hour of being in church. An eternal worship service would be horrible. I would rather be in hell!" I continue to think that Christian worship (if it is boring) needs to be engaging emotionally–perhaps by being more honest about the troubles and pain of life. Or perhaps by the leaders, artists, and musicians taking more risks. If they do take risks, it will also be appropriate for part of the experience of those being led to be "critics" in the sense of discerning recipients (like people who go to movies or plays or concerts together and then discuss what struck them emotionally and what they didn't like). When a musician or artist has tried something new, it is not inappropriate to chat about it afterward with friends. That is part of the experience. A student mentioned that K-Love radio station promotes itself as "positive and encouraging." And yet, interestingly, the top hits on the charts on Spotify are explicit. Or even if not explicit: painful like this song I think is catchy and a top hit right now : https://genius.com/Imagine-dragons-bad-liar-lyrics about divorce and separation. Is it sinful that people want to listen to and resonate with angry, passionate songs? Or is it human to express the strongest emotions and we as Christians need to find ways to articulate and release and express those things too–as the psalmists did? Is it that we are so deadened and calloused that we need horror movies and violence and nudity and explicit language in Rated R movies to get a emotional reaction? Yes, maybe. We are coarsened so that we need increasingly stronger stimulants to get a reaction. That would be a reason not to expose oneself to that stuff–so that you might remain pure and innocent. I agree with that to a large extent. BUT I think worship leaders and pastor and Christian artists and communicators do need to be aware of how raw and broken and confused and self-destructive and passionate and unhinged human beings are and name that and surface that as a reality. That is a way to pave the way for "confess your sins one to another." But that of course does not mean glorifying the sinful things or viewing them as hopeless BUT I do think more of that exposure to human frailty and grappling with it would make our worship services more similar to the pathos of TV shows, plays, and movies. And I think that would be a good thing. It is tragic to think of church services being seen as boring and ho hum.  Instead, it should be like therapy or "every week our pastor and musicians bring it–they try to move us, engage us, wake us up. Sometimes they misfire and it turns out badly. Sometimes it is not hopeful enough. Sometimes it is too raw. Sometimes it is too positive and cheery. Sometimes it is too cheery. But each week, they bring it. And broken people are coming. And people interested in reflecting on the human plight are coming. It is must see TV. There is FOMO if you are not there because each week we are delving into the problems of life and pleading for God to be present and bring wisdom, strength, and hope." 

  • Great movie for pastors: Lars and the Real Girl

    Go rent Lars and the Real Girl (PG-13).

    How I pick movies:
    I have blogged before about how I tend to pick movies: How to Sort Through Which Movies are Worth Seeing.  In short, we often look at Christianity Today Movies and see what they have given 3 1/2 or 4 stars–see their page Our Top Rated Movies.  Amy and I don't really watch R rated movies because they make us cringe too much–the sex and the violence–is that because we are around a 3 year old and 1 year old and so our normal environment is so gentle?  The Christianity Today Movies site is not foolproof–basically they have assembled a bunch of reviewers who are thoughtful Christians but their tastes vary.  So my final criteria is to look at the Rotten Tomatoes site which serves as a collecting place for reviews.  The beauty of Rotten Tomatoes is that they take something very subjective–movies–and provide survey results and excerpts of reviews so that you can easily get a snapshot of whether reviewers liked the movie or not.  Now, this may sound like a lot of research but it can help you find movies that were reviewed by a Christian highly and were liked by a lot of reviewers. 

    Recommendation:
    So, to my point, I would recommend Lars and the Real Girl rated

    Here is the Rotten Tomatoes information as an example of how their system works:
    Reviews Counted: 125

    Fresh: 101

    Rotten:24

    Average Rating: 7.1/10

    My synopsis of Lars and the Real Girl:
    In the movie,
    a small town (think "church") helps bring healing to a man with emotional problems because they love him well.  It is quite beautiful.  Lonely Lars
    pretends a life-sized doll is his girlfriend.  The town
    goes along with his pretending – showing that they really love him; but they also push him beyond his pretending.  It is a great picture
    of what the church should be. 

    The only disclaimer is that the doll he ordered is a life-size sex doll
    but this is really quite a minor part of the story.  It is thus rated PG-13
    "for some sex-related content." 

    Additional recommendations:
    Amy and I also liked Dan in Real Life.

    and Once

    Note again my post:
    How to Sort Through Which Movies are Worth Seeing (August 7, 2007).

  • How to Sort Through Which Movies are Worth Seeing

    I highly recommend Christianity Today’s Our Top Rated Movies page on their website.   

    When I am looking for a movie to see, I am in the habit of checking the reviews on Christianity Today’s Movie site.  I will hardly ever see a movie that didn’t get at least 3 out of 4 stars from them.   I just don’t want to spend two hours filling my head with complete filth and it is hard to judge a DVD by its cover in the video store. 

    For your convenience, they have placed all of their 3 1/2 and 4 star rated movies on one page called Our Top Rated Movies.  I admit that I have sometimes printed that page out and brought it to Blockbuster Video with me.   I have also wished that I had internet access on my phone so I could check out this page at the movie theater. 

    You should know though that their "star ranking" is NOT a group process where all of Christianity Today’s editors watch a movie and then decide what it should be ranked!  No, the ranking is one Christian critic’s opinion.  I happen to think their 10 critics are pretty trustworthy voices but I also glance at why the movie has gotten the MPAA rating (PG-13, R, etc.) it has gotten.  (The review page for the movie gives all of this information in "The Family Corner" section of their review – how much violence, sex, etc.).  If it is rated R, I look a bit more closely at why the critic has given it such a high star rating before I see it.

    Christianity Today also provides links to reviews by other Christian critics on each of their reviews:

    Plugged In
    Crosswalk
    Catholic News Service
    Past the Popcorn

    They also have other lists that you might appreciate:
    Most Redeeming of ’06 – they made this list as a group of critics
    Critics’ Choice 2006 – they made this list as a group of critics
    Readers’ Choice 2006

    The reviews are also organized this way:

    I will often also check the website Rotten Tomatoes which collates movie reviews and gives you a percentage of how many of the reviews by mainstream critics are positive.  Most of the high rated movies by Christianity Today also get a 85-95% positive reviews by all movie critics at Rotten Tomatoes.  If a CT review is very high and the mainstream critics give it a low rating, you might want to look more closely at CT’s review to see what they see that the mainstream critics don’t. 

    Below I have pasted from Christianity Today’s Our Top Rated Movies page, the movies they have given 4 stars or 3
    1/2 stars, that I have seen.  I have sometimes been disappointed, but not often. 

    I should say also
    though that few of these movies are "veg out and relax" movies.  Most
    were ranked high by the critics because the themes were dealt with thoughtfully.  I have made a comment about each. 

    4 Stars

    3½ Stars

    Ben Witherington is a New Testament scholar at Asbury Seminary.  This does not automatically make him a good film critic!  But I enjoy reading his take on things on his blog.   

    He has recent reviews of:
    The Bourne Ultimatum– The Ultimate Thriller
    ‘Hairspray’– Another Hare Brained Musical?
    Live Free or Die Hard– or Live Hard and Die Free?…
    ‘Ratatouille’– A Midsummer’s Gourmet Treat

    So, if you are like me and don’t have time to read every review of every film that comes out, listen to Christianity Today’s critics as a starting point.  Their 3 1/2 and 4 star rated films are at Christianity Today’s Our Top Rated Movies page.